What Causes Frosting in the Skin with a TCA? What Happens to the Skin?

Doctor Answers 5

TCA turns skin white as proteins denature.

December 13th, 2010

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As others have explained, the change in skin color when trichloroacetic acid (TCA) is used on the skin is the chemical equivalent of heating the albumin in egg whites--these proteins turn from clear to white. In this (chemical peel) usage, frost refers to color, not temperature. In a chemical (TCA) peel, the change in the surface proteins is chemical, not thermal, though it certainly "feels" hot as the nerve endings are stimulated by the acid "burn."

One important fact is that the degree of whiteness is an outward manifestation of how thorough the proteins are being denatured, related to the strength and duration of the acid application. The dead outer layer of denatured proteins slough off after a few days (the "peel") and the living dermis and epithelial cells in the skin adnexal structures (hair follicles and sweat glands) produce both collagen and elastic fibers in the dermis as a new epithelial surface forms on top of it, just like healing a blister or superficial burn.

Just like a thermal burn, the depth of injury determines the degree of healing, and the amount of wrinkle tightening. (Too-deep tissue damage, or deepening the injury with infection or drying can cause scarring, just as a too-deep burn can.) The new cells also must return from the dark peeled color, to red/pink, to normal skin color that can be more even-toned than prior to the peel.

The blue color in the Obagi Blue Peel is just one doctor's (very successful) way of modifying the peel chemicals to try to better control peel depth and safety. But the active ingredient is still TCA.

What Causes the FROSTING effect of TCA and other Chemical Peels?

December 2nd, 2010

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The frosting is the result of the acid acting on and breaking up the protein in the skin. Clear protein in the upper skin layers becomes white almost instantly similar to the effect of egg white hitting a hot cooking surface.
The ONSET of frosting and its DURATION depend on the concentration of TCA applied to the skin.
The inherent problem with chemical peels is that while TCA concentrations can be standardized, skin thicknesses and injury vary from area to area (lower lid VS cheek) and from person to person. Instead of "reading" peels, more accurate peels may be performed with modern Erbium lasers such as the Scition Joule - Microlaser Peel and Profractional.
Dr. Peter Aldea

TCA and Skin Frosting

December 2nd, 2010

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TCA (trichloroacetic acid) peels are a form of chemical peel used for skin resurfacing. The penetration and subsequently, the overall degree of change effected are related to the strength of the TCA. TCA and other forms of acid penetrate the skin via a process known as coagulative necrosis: the frosting is a result of this event. The degree of coagulative necrosis that occurs (depth of penetration) is related to the TCA concentration applied. Therefore, each strength of TCA has a form of "auto-stop" on penetration based on acid concentration.

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